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The “Water Problem”(sic), the Illusory Pond and Life’s Submarine Emergence—A Review

The assumption that there was a “water problem” at the emergence of life—that the Hadean Ocean was simply too wet and salty for life to have emerged in it—is here subjected to geological and experimental reality checks. The “warm little pond” that would take the place of the submarine alkaline vent...

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Autor principal: Russell, Michael J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8151828/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34068713
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life11050429
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author Russell, Michael J.
author_facet Russell, Michael J.
author_sort Russell, Michael J.
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description The assumption that there was a “water problem” at the emergence of life—that the Hadean Ocean was simply too wet and salty for life to have emerged in it—is here subjected to geological and experimental reality checks. The “warm little pond” that would take the place of the submarine alkaline vent theory (AVT), as recently extolled in the journal Nature, flies in the face of decades of geological, microbiological and evolutionary research and reasoning. To the present author, the evidence refuting the warm little pond scheme is overwhelming given the facts that (i) the early Earth was a water world, (ii) its all-enveloping ocean was never less than 4 km deep, (iii) there were no figurative “Icelands” or “Hawaiis”, nor even an “Ontong Java” then because (iv) the solidifying magma ocean beneath was still too mushy to support such salient loadings on the oceanic crust. In place of the supposed warm little pond, we offer a well-protected mineral mound precipitated at a submarine alkaline vent as life’s womb: in place of lipid membranes, we suggest peptides; we replace poisonous cyanide with ammonium and hydrazine; instead of deleterious radiation we have the appropriate life-giving redox and pH disequilibria; and in place of messy chemistry we offer the potential for life’s emergence from the simplest of geochemically available molecules and ions focused at a submarine alkaline vent in the Hadean—specifically within the nano-confined flexible and redox active interlayer walls of the mixed-valent double layer oxyhydroxide mineral, fougerite/green rust comprising much of that mound.
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spelling pubmed-81518282021-05-27 The “Water Problem”(sic), the Illusory Pond and Life’s Submarine Emergence—A Review Russell, Michael J. Life (Basel) Review The assumption that there was a “water problem” at the emergence of life—that the Hadean Ocean was simply too wet and salty for life to have emerged in it—is here subjected to geological and experimental reality checks. The “warm little pond” that would take the place of the submarine alkaline vent theory (AVT), as recently extolled in the journal Nature, flies in the face of decades of geological, microbiological and evolutionary research and reasoning. To the present author, the evidence refuting the warm little pond scheme is overwhelming given the facts that (i) the early Earth was a water world, (ii) its all-enveloping ocean was never less than 4 km deep, (iii) there were no figurative “Icelands” or “Hawaiis”, nor even an “Ontong Java” then because (iv) the solidifying magma ocean beneath was still too mushy to support such salient loadings on the oceanic crust. In place of the supposed warm little pond, we offer a well-protected mineral mound precipitated at a submarine alkaline vent as life’s womb: in place of lipid membranes, we suggest peptides; we replace poisonous cyanide with ammonium and hydrazine; instead of deleterious radiation we have the appropriate life-giving redox and pH disequilibria; and in place of messy chemistry we offer the potential for life’s emergence from the simplest of geochemically available molecules and ions focused at a submarine alkaline vent in the Hadean—specifically within the nano-confined flexible and redox active interlayer walls of the mixed-valent double layer oxyhydroxide mineral, fougerite/green rust comprising much of that mound. MDPI 2021-05-10 /pmc/articles/PMC8151828/ /pubmed/34068713 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life11050429 Text en © 2021 by the author. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Russell, Michael J.
The “Water Problem”(sic), the Illusory Pond and Life’s Submarine Emergence—A Review
title The “Water Problem”(sic), the Illusory Pond and Life’s Submarine Emergence—A Review
title_full The “Water Problem”(sic), the Illusory Pond and Life’s Submarine Emergence—A Review
title_fullStr The “Water Problem”(sic), the Illusory Pond and Life’s Submarine Emergence—A Review
title_full_unstemmed The “Water Problem”(sic), the Illusory Pond and Life’s Submarine Emergence—A Review
title_short The “Water Problem”(sic), the Illusory Pond and Life’s Submarine Emergence—A Review
title_sort “water problem”(sic), the illusory pond and life’s submarine emergence—a review
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8151828/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34068713
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life11050429
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